Patterns and Logic — What Comes Next?

Patterns and Logic — What Comes Next?

When a child spots a pattern — red-blue-red-blue — and continues it, they are doing something amazing: they are finding order inside a complex world. Patterns are the foundation of mathematical and logical thinking, and in fact of all science. And at kindergarten age, they are also simple, colourful, and a lot of fun!

Background and Basic Definitions

What is a pattern? A pattern is a sequence that repeats itself according to a fixed rule. For example: red bead, blue bead, red bead, blue bead — the rule is: red-blue repeats over and over.

Types of patterns for early childhood:

  • AB pattern — two items repeat: red-blue-red-blue.
  • ABC pattern — three items repeat: circle-square-triangle-circle-square-triangle.
  • Growing pattern — the quantity grows each time: star, star-star, star-star-star.

What is the odd one out? — A child looks at a group of objects where most belong to the same category, and finds the one that does not belong — for example three animals and one piece of fruit.

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Complete the next pattern

Solution Steps

  1. Step 1 — Lay out a row of items (blocks, cards, stickers) following a pattern.
  2. Step 2 — Cover the next item and ask: "What do you think comes next?"
  3. Step 3 — Let the child uncover and check — whether they got it right or not, both are learning!
  4. Step 4 — Ask: "What is the rule of this sequence?" — encourage them to explain in words.
  5. Step 5 — Then switch: the child creates a pattern and asks a parent or friend to guess.

Worked Examples

Example 1: AB Pattern — Colours

Problem: Someone arranged beads: red, blue, red, blue, red, ___. Which bead comes next?

Solution:

  1. The rule: red-blue repeats.
  2. After red always comes blue.
  3. The last item is red — so next is blue.

Answer: The next bead is blue.

Example 2: ABC Pattern — Shapes

Problem: Circle, square, triangle, circle, square, ___. What comes next?

Solution:

  1. The rule: circle-square-triangle all three repeat.
  2. We have reached: circle, square — next is triangle.

Answer: The next shape is a triangle.

Example 3: Pattern with Animals

Problem: Dog, cat, cat, dog, cat, cat, dog, ___. What comes next?

Solution:

  1. Identify the rule: dog, cat, cat — a group of three repeats.
  2. After the dog that just appeared — next comes a cat.

Answer: The next animal is a cat.

Example 4: Odd One Out — Fruit and Vegetable

Problem: This group contains: apple, banana, carrot, watermelon. Which one is the odd one out?

Solution:

  1. Apple — fruit.
  2. Banana — fruit.
  3. Carrot — vegetable!
  4. Watermelon — fruit.
  5. Carrot is the only vegetable, not a fruit.

Answer: The carrot is the odd one out — it is a vegetable, all the others are fruit.

Example 5: Odd One Out — Musical Instruments and a Toy

Problem: The group contains: drum, flute, ball, violin. Which one is the odd one out?

Solution:

  1. Drum — musical instrument.
  2. Flute — musical instrument.
  3. Ball — a play toy, not a musical instrument!
  4. Violin — musical instrument.

Answer: The ball is the odd one out — all the others are musical instruments.

Common Mistakes

✗ Common mistake: A child notices "red-blue" but focuses only on the last colour they see and guesses "red" after red.

✓ The correct way: Help the child find the "rule" of the sequence before guessing. Ask: "What repeats? Every how many items?" and then — "So what comes next?"

✗ Common mistake: In an odd-one-out question, the child picks an item based on personal preference ("I don't like bananas") rather than logic.

✓ The correct way: Ask: "Why is it different from the others? Which category does it belong to?" The assumption: there is always a real logical reason, not a feeling.

Practice Tips

  • Tip — create patterns with your body! For example: clap-stomp-clap-stomp. Children love to move.
  • Tip — patterns can be spotted on the weekly calendar too: Monday-Tuesday-Wednesday... that is also a repeating sequence!
  • Tip — when a child creates a colour pattern, let them continue it on their own. The ability to continue is more important than being told what comes next.
  • Tip — books with repeating refrains (like "Brown Bear, Brown Bear") teach patterns in a literary and enjoyable way.

Summary and Key Formulas

Key points:

  • AB pattern — two items repeat: red-blue-red-blue.
  • ABC pattern — three items repeat: circle-square-triangle.
  • "What comes next?" — find the rule, then continue it.
  • "Odd one out?" — everyone belongs to one group, one is different — find it!